studio museum in harlem set to open with the message that ‘black art matters’

studio museum: a lighthouse on 125th street

 

The Studio Museum in Harlem officially opens its purpose-built new home to the public on Saturday, November 15th. Today, November 6th, designboom attended a preview of the building and heard presentations from Studio Museum team Thelma Golden and Raymond J. McGuire, along with architects Pascale Sablan and Erin Flynn.

 

From the moment visitors approach the new museum on West 125th Street in New York, the design signals the meeting of its mission with its urban context. The project replaces the earlier commercial structure adapted in 1982 for the institution, and marks the first time the museum has had a home created expressly for its program.

 

Raymond J. McGuire, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Studio Museum in Harlem, describes the spirit of the museum and its programming:This building says to the world, Harlem matters. Black art matters. Black institutions matter.

 

It will stand as a lighthouse on 125th Street. A space where creativity and community meet, where young people can see themselves reflected, and orders of African descent can continue to shape our history. This new chapter was not inevitable. It was earned through decades of vision, stewardship and belief.’

exterior view of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s new building, 2025. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

 

 

architect pascale sablan draws from the streets of harlem

 

The Studio Museum in Harlem intentionally draws from the ‘street, the stage, the sanctuary, and the stoop.’ Across the city, these are familiar typologies of gathering, expression and belonging. Architect Pascale Sablan of Adjaye Associates echoed this when she said:It is our hope that every surface, every light-filled space, and every moment of this building will speak to you of this mission.’ The museum occupies the same footprint as the earlier museum but is re-imagined for the twenty-first century.

 

At street level a double-height window opens the museum to the sidewalk: visitors can sense daylight passing through the gallery interior, while the broad frontage activates the pedestrian flow of Harlem. The facade, composed of dark-grey precast concrete with sand-blasted and polished finishes, interleaves glass and bronze-toned curtain wall with vertical fins. This material palette references the masonry architecture of the neighborhood while giving the building a refined presence.

exterior view of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s new building, 2025. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

 

 

a museum as a ‘reverse stoop’

 

Inside, the ‘reverse stoop’ greets visitors as a stepped area leading downward from the street into the museum lobby. The architects describe this gesture as an invitation to connect. It’s a spatial threshold that brings visitors from the city into the institution with little impedance.

 

The Studio Museum in Harlem offers 82,000 square feet of interior space, which represents an increase of more than fifty percent in exhibition area and almost sixty percent more public spaces. The gallery volumes are laid out across multiple floors: second and third floors host exhibition galleries and the education center; the fourth floor accommodates studios for the Artist-in-Residence program and a reading room; the fifth floor offers flexible event space; the roof terrace on the sixth floor opens toward sweeping views of Harlem and beyond.

 

Vertical circulation is anchored by a monumental stair clad in terrazzo, located in the central vertical gallery and connecting the lower level to the fourth floor. Corridor galleries and stairs from the fourth floor to the roof are executed in precast concrete with satin-brass railings, aligning material consistency throughout the building.

exterior view of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s new building, featuring David Hammons’s Untitled flag (2004), 2025. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

 

 

Public spaces are designed to feel porous. The café at the lower level, the welcome centre, the lecture and performance hall, retail, and project spaces are all intertwined with exhibition areas. The design teams emphasized accessibility, with two elevators (one shared visitor and freight) and barrier-free routes throughout. Thelma Golden, Ford Foundation Director and Chief Curator of the Studio Museum in Harlem, notes:this building is a reflection of all that‘ — the institution’s mission, the community’s energy, the artists’ aspirations.

 

In her remarks at the preview event, Erin Flynn, RA, LEED AP, Partner, Cooper Robertson, emphasizes:we aim to cultivate a sense of engagement among the many different users of the building… Whether someone is discovering the art, participating in educational programs, creating in the artist studios, or simply enjoying a coffee.’

the ‘reverse stoop’ is a stepped area leading down from the street into the lobby. image © designboom

 

 

Daylight filters from skylights and double-height spaces deep into the building. The gallery in the third floor includes a barrel-vaulted double-height space to accommodate large-scale works. Educational workshops and studios are positioned adjoining the gallery spaces so that production and display co-exist. Four art niches on the street facade provide places for outdoor sculpture and installations.

 

The roof terrace, whose gardens are curated by landscape design firm Studio Zewde, offers planting around the perimeter and views across Harlem’s skyline. It allows events and informal gatherings to take place in open air as an extension of the gallery into the city.

 

During the presentation, Golden asks attendees:Think about what it took for us to get here… our resilience, our longevity, our continuing relevance in this moment.’

‘From the Studio: Fifty-Eight Years of Artists in Residence’ (installation view) in the Museum’s artist in Residence Studios, 2025. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

 

 

More than a landmark work of architecture, the Studio Museum’s new home in Harlem is a commitment to an expanded program. The exhibition spaces, the studios for artists in residence, the educational workshops, the rooftop terrace, all aim to widen the museum’s role in the neighborhood and beyond. The building is designed to host temporary exhibition spaces, a permanent collection, public programming, and spaces for community engagement.

The Studio Museum in Harlem’s new terrace, with views to the south. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

 

Pascale Sablan says:From the very beginning, our team was profoundly aware of the responsibility we carry to create a building worthy of this extraordinary museum of the Harlem community of New York City and of the global world of the arts. This design was born out of the Studio Museum’s vision to translate the culture of Harlem into building more.

 

Through many deep and inspiring conversations between Thelma Goldman and David Adjaye, this vision evolved into a reimagining of Harlem’s own vernacular architecture. It is our hope that every surface, every light-filled space, and every moment of this building will speak to you of this mission, the courage, and the aspirations of the Studio Museum.’

interior view of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s new building featuring the Grand Stair. courtesy Studio Museum in Harlem. photo: © Albert Vecerka/Esto

installation view. image © designboom

 

project info:

 

name: Studio Museum in Harlem

design architect: Adjaye Associates | @adjayeassociates

executive architect: Cooper Robertson | @cooperrobertsonpartners

location: 125th Street, Harlem, New York

landscape designer: Studio Zewde | @studio_zewde

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